G-20 – A Starting Gun for Recovery

By Simon Maxwell, director of the Overseas Development Institute.

The G-20 Communiqué was published yesterday. Probably fewer than a dozen people in the world fully understand the numbers, but the words and numbers together secure gains for development and for the poor. The text provides a plan of attack, but also the standard by which leaders will be judged, particularly when the G-20 meets again later this year.

The text says that ‘prosperity is indivisible' and that the recovery plan must safeguard the needs and jobs of hard-working families in all the countries of the world. It identifies a ‘collective responsibility' to mitigate the social impact of the crisis. It reaffirms commitment to the Millennium Development Goals and ‘to achieving our respective ODA pledges, including commitments on Aid for Trade, debt relief, and the Gleneagles commitments, especially to sub-Saharan Africa'. Social protection is in, and food security, and jobs, and climate change. And underpinning the package is a commitment to new rules and institutions, from bank regulation and tax havens, to a trade deal and open competition for top posts at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Underpinning all this are the numbers: $1.1 trillion in total, including $750 billion for the IMF, $250 billion for trade credit, and gold sales to support concessional finance for the poorest countries. In total, $50 billion is earmarked for this group of countries. Don't ask whether this is all new money, or additional to aid pledges, or available quickly enough to make a difference. Some of it is new, for example through a Chinese commitment of $40 billion to the IMF, or through gold sales. Some of it, I expect we'll find, is not.

To help make sense of the proposals, the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) has published its own Charter for the G-20, which was profiled on Canadian TV. This was not an institutional manifesto, but did reflect broad consensus among ODI researchers on the main priorities: better monitoring of the effect of the crisis on the poor; opposition to protectionism, including with respect to labour migration; a share of the fiscal stimulus to be spent in Africa; a commitment to social protection; a big push on green growth; and a programme of governance reform, to further open the club of big economies to the voice and votes of the 172 countries not invited to London. How well did the G-20 match these aspirations?

The communiqué has many of the right words and some of the right measures:

It took longer than it should have done for the full impact of the crisis on the poorest countries and people to be appreciated. The number of lost livelihoods and damaged lives will continue to grow before the recovery begins. That's why speedy implementation of the measures agreed is now the top priority. Gordon Brown and the other leaders have fired the starting gun. Now the race must be run.

P.S. Interesting to hear some African voices on this. I did a one hour phone in yesterday on Africa Have Your Say, with Donald Kaberuka, President of the African Development Bank, and Dev Chamroo , Mauritius Director of Investment Promotion.

Re-published with permission by the Overseas Development Institute.